The Daily Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 131, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 17, 1914 Page: 3 of 4
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NORMAN DAILY TRANSCRIPT
A GOOD COMPLEXION
GUARANTEED. USE ZONA POMADE
the beauty powder compressed with healing
agents, you will never be annoyed by pim-
ples, blackheads or facial blemishes. It
not satisfied after thirty days' trial your
dealer will exchange for joc in other goods.
Zona has satisfied for twenty years—try it
at our risk. At dealers or mailed, 50c.
ZONA COMPANY, WICHITA, KANSAS
Koveralls
ALL BIGHTS RESERVED
Ceep Kids Kleen
•ti for clilidjtit 1 tu 8 jrs« • of >|i
M«>U In out | l*.« Willi drop ba> k
fcaally Eatily wulitd
l*o t *lit «U tie bands to itup tlr-
•uiation. Mads In bin* dttilm, ted
whito hickory strl,-*# fur all Ilia ynt
luund Alto liflitoi w*i|hl luatorUI
for •uniuiar w«ar. All ( a r ui • ti I ■
IrlauusU with fast lad or t>lua|aUUa
Ma la In Dutch i.a- k with al' ow
• laavaa and blfh nack and lonf
alaava* A naw iu|t FREB If
lhay rip. 7R« tha ault. Sant by
Parrai! Poat pia| aid 011 receipt
of prist. Katiaf.u u ii guaranteed
money cheerfully r a f u it d a d
State ag« of cnlld whan ur<terln|
Levi Striuls & Co., Dept. P4
San Francisco, California j
SOUPS EASY TO MAKE
PALATABLE AND ECONOMICAL
ADDITIONS TO THE MENU.
Enable Housewife to Utilize Leftovei
Materials Which Could Not Be
Otherwise Employed—Threa
of the Best Recipes.
A TREAT, MONEY SAVED. THREE
rounds pure Kentucky tobacco; natura! leaf;
'■hewing or amoklng; heat In the world; par-
cel poat charges paid, 1; 6 II.a, >1D0
C ountry Hoya Tobacco Co., OwenMbnru, Ky.
LOSSES SURELY PREVENTED
by Cuttsr's Blackleg Pills.
prli-ed, fresh, reliable; preferred l*y
Western stockmen, Ixwauae they
BUCK by Cuttar'a Blaekleg Pills, l/.w
$ IT' Writs for Uxiklrt and testimoniala.
* . i" _1 m 10-dose pkqe. Blackleg Pills JI.00
59-dose pk««. Blackleg Pilli 4.00
U any Injector, but Cutter's l>«*st.
The superiority of Cutter products Is due to over II
yeari of 8(>erl&ll&Ini; In vaceines and serums only.
Insist on Cutter's. If unobtainable, order direct
Tha Cut tar Laboratory, Berkeley. Cal., or Chicago, |/l
Silence Is the wisest argument or an
Ignorant man.
Smile on wash day. That's when you use
Red Cross Hal! ft!tie. Clothes whiter than
snow. All grocers. Adv.
When a man says he was driven to
drink he always insinuates that some
woman handled the ribbons.
Dr. 1 ierce'a Pleasant Pellets regulate
and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels.
(Sugar-coated, tiny granules. Easy to take
as candy. Adv.
The more a man makes h ve to a
woman the more she admires another
man to whom she has to make love.
Lay something by for a rainy day,
and Just as soon as the clouds begin
to gather some fellow will come
along and borrow it.—New
Times.
York
Undesirable Lot.
He—Will you share my lot?
She—No, I don't like the crop of
wild oats on it.
An Emotionalist.
"So you're hanging around broke
again?" said the policeman.
"Yes," answered Bill the Burglar.
"I haven't a cent. 1 broke into a
house night before last and the poor
mark of a taxpayer told me such a
hard luck story that he had mo shed-
din' tears an' lendin' him my last
cent."
First Aid to Matrimony.
"The English military uniform,"
said General Holland in Canton, "is
the best looking and It is also the
best to fight in. Take the photo-
graphs of the wounded and dead Eng-
lish officers—Viscount Hawarden, the
Hon. W. A. Cecil, Lieut, the Hon. R.
Keppel. Did you ever see such a
handsome lot of uniforms?
"No wonder all the English soldiers
marry well," General Holland conclud-
ed. "Handsome is that handsome does
—and the English uniform certainly
does havoc amongst the English heir-
esses."
/■'
Prices of foodstuffs are keeping
wonderfully normal, but it behooves
the housekeeper in these uncertain
times to learn to make the very best
use of the supplies which she obtains,
so that she can supply nutritious
meals at the lowest possible cost.
Soups provide a great deal of nutri-
tion, and in making them cooked
bones, whether of meat or fish, maka
a really good basis for the stock,
while the water in which vegetable*
have been cooked is also excellent for
soups.
Into the stock pot can go all meat
trimmings, bones, carcasses and gib-
lets of poultry and game, all rinds
and trimmings of tongue, ham and
bacon, all liquids in which meat or
vegetables have been cooked and all
strippings of vegetables.
All these should be properly trim-
med, rinsed and put into the stock
pot. Simmer, but do not boil the
soup. Ten minutes' rapid boiling will
cloud a kettleful of soup. Do not add
the vegetables until the last hour of
cooking. The delicate flavoring of
both meats and vegetables is easily
driven olT in the steam if they are
boiled rapidly or cooked too long.
An easily prepared and cheap soup
is made as follows: Place some bones,
cooked or uncooked, In a pot with
an onion, two carrots and two sliced
turnips, two stalks of parsley, a little
pepper and salt, and pour in sufficient
water to Just cover them all. Bring
this all Just to a boil, then draw the
pan to the side of the fire, and let
the contents simmer for two to three
hours. Now cook and blend one-half
an ounce of dripping and three-fourths
ounce of flour. Strain the liquor on to
this, s irring well. Then put all back
on to the fire and simmer for fifteen
minutes, and serve.
To make an inexpensive vegetable
Boup slice down half a carrot, half a
turnip Rtid one onion and fry them
in one-half an ounce of clarified drip-
ping for five minutes; then lift them
out, make the fat hot again and fry
In it one-half an ounce of flour until
a brown color. Take the pan from
the fire, add one and one-half pints of
stock, stirring over the fire until it
boils and is smooth, then put in the
vegetables, a bunch of herbs' and a lit-
tle salt, and let all simmer until the
vegetables are tender. Lift out the
bunch of herbs and serve the soup.
This is a good onion soup: Peel
and cut up rather small three good-
sized onions and cook them in two
ounces of dripping in a covered pan
for one hour until tender, then mois-
ten with one and a half pints of hot
water in which a cauliflower or beans
have been cooked or even plain wa-
ter. Add some slices of bread cut
diagonally and season with pepper
and salt. Cover the pan again and
let the contents simmer for at least
kn hour. Crush the onions through
a sieve and Just before serving gradu-
ally add a tablespoonful of grated
cheese, stirring rapidly into the soup
to blend.
Self-Loading Shotgun
12 GAUGE, 5 SHOTS
The recoil reloads this gun. You simply pull the
trigger for each shot. This new gun is safe, strong and
simple. It has all the good points of other recoil-operated A
shotguns, and many improvements besides.
Among them are Nickel steel construction
and a reloading system that requires no
change for different loads.
It's the Fowling Gun Par Excellence
NO GREAT DEMAND FOR BOYS NOT SUCH DEADLY ENEMIES
The "Meat"
of Corn
■— the sweet centers of choice
Indian corn; cooked, seasoned
just right, rolled thin as paper
end toasted until they become
golden brown flakes — crisp
and delicious I
That's why
Post
Toasties
are better than ordinary "cora
flakes."
Toasties are packed in an
inner container inside the
tight-sealed, familiar, yellow
carton — keeps the food fresh
and crisp lor your appetite —
Superior
Corn Flakes
— sold by Grocers.
Epicurean Croquettes.
Soak a finnan haddie one hour, us-
ing milk and water in equal parts to
cover, then put in oven and let stand
for 30 minutes; drain and separate
into flakes. There should be one and
three-fourths cupfuls. Cook one table-
spoonful of chopped shallot, two table-
spoonfuls each of chopped green and
red peppers in three tablespoonfuls of
butter five minutes, add one-third of a
cupful of flour and one cupful of milk.
Stir in finnan haddie, add one-half tea-
spoonful of salt, one-fourth teaspoon-
ful of paprika and a few grains of pep-
per. Cool, shape, crumb and fry.
Pickled Fish.
Cut the fish up into convenient
pieces, rub them well with salt, and
| let them lie for a few hours. Then
put in a pan with water to cover them
) and bring to a boil. When boiling
j move the kettle back where they will
j boil slowly from three to five minutes,
but not longer, or the bits will fall to
j pieces. Lift the pieces out carefully
j and pack them In a crock, putting a
I thin layer of sliced onions between
each layer of fish, and while still hot
pour cold spiced vinegar over to cov-
er them.
Male Children a Poor Second With
Those Who Would Become
Foster Parents.
'The French are receiving in their
homes refugees from Belgium and
northern France. The Germans are
doing the same as regards the refu
gees from oriental Prussia "
The speaker was a returned tourist
He went on:
"Many French and German house-
holds have neither room enough nor
means enough to take in a whole fam-
ily. They must confine themselves to
one child. Well, they invariably bid
then for a little girl. They never want
a boy.
"1 have seen in my travels several
hundred of these offers to take in
children—and every blessed offer was
for girls. What Is the cause of this?
The cause must evidently be that
girls are better behaved, more amiable
and nicer ail around than boys.
"The war, besides teaching me ge-
ography, lias taught me that female
children stand miles higher in popular
esteem than male children. What's
the trouble with us males? We'd bet-
ter look to ourselves."
DANDRUFF AND FALLING HAIR
P. O. Box 3, Wanego, W. Va.—"I was
troubled with dandruff, falling hair
and itching scalp for two or three
years, it was so bad at times my
coat-collar would be covered so I was
ashamed to go In company. It itched
bo my head was irritated and pimples
would come on my scalp. My hair
came out badly; it became thin and
dry, bo dry that it seemed as though
there was no life in it.
"Remedies failed to do me any good. I
About a year ago I saw the advertise-
ment of Cuticura Soap and Ointment
and sent for a sample. After the first
treatment I discovered I was getting
better. I purchased Bome Cuticura
Soap and Ointment and continued
using them until I was completely
cured." (Signed) Geo. W. King, Jan.
1, 1014.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold !
throughout the world. Sample of each }
free,with 32-p. Skin llook. Address post-
card "Cuticura, Dept L, Boston."—Adv. !
Dead Soldier's Gift.
Among the contributions to Queen
■Mary of England's Work for Women
Fund received recently was an en-
gagement ring which arrived by mail,
accompanied by the following letter:
"The boy who gave me this before
he went away will never come back.
He made me promise before he Joined
his regiment to give it away If any-
thing happened to him. It's a hard
wrench to part with It, but I prom-
ised him to do bo. I send it to you
as his gift to the Queen's Fund."
MODERN WAR IS MERCIFUL
Under Existing Conditions the Wound-
ed Are Given a Fair Chance
to Recover to Health.
A general Impression is that with
powerful weapons of great precision j
greater loss of life and greater pain v„i„„ ,, ...
,i tu. .i i i . *olce at the keyhole, 'mother says I
are caused. That view is almost cei^ |
tainly Inaccurate. The modern bul-
A Modern Disease.
OKI Jake woke up and rubbed his
eyes as he gazed on the unfamiliar
room 'I heu he remembered, ami
hopped out of bed. Fifteen yearn hud
he saved out of the meager wages giv-
en him by a grateful farmer, in order
to vluit Loudon.
"1'iicie," came his young nephew's
"Bloody Chasm" That Separated Na-
tionalists and Ulsterites Might
Have Been Bridged.
As all the world knows, interna-
tional ar has proved a great concil-
iator In Ireland. As a contributor to
the Bystander says, you cannot give
much attention to the dismemberment
of the empire when you are not cer-
tain whether you will have an em-
pire to dismember.
The*e is a geniality about the Na
tionalist volunteer that makes you.
know that he would rather tight some
one else—Germany in this case—than
Ulster. A few stories are current
thai help to show how very ripe Ire-
land was for conciliation. Not long
ago a company of Nationalist volun-
teer.-;, passing a company of Ulster-
men, and being uncertain as to the
customary etiquette between deadly
enemies—saluted. In a northern dis-
let, iays the Scotsman, unless It Is of
the toft-nosed type. Is on the whole
merciful, and either killB outright or
gives Its victim a fair chance of re-
covery. It does not, as a rule, muti-
late.
The ambulance corps was practical-
ly unknown 60 years ago, and not
only is aid brought more rapidly to
the wounded, but It is far more ef-
fective than In the pre-Llster days.
Rapidity of conveyance has Increased
beyond all comparison. In the pres-
ent war It 1b true to say that in many
cases men have been lying In a Brit-
ish hospital within 24 hours of
receiving their wounds. If the
risk of being hit Is greater, the
chances of recovery from injury have
been immensely Increased.
you come and set these marrer seeds,
and Bee what you can do with the old
black 'en what's got a bad leg?"
Uncle and nephew boou entered ths
little back garden, when the old boy
stopped short with amazement, and ad-
justed hiB glasses to gaze at the small
figure on the grass plot, w ho was per-
j forming gymnastic feats.
"Does thy sister have fits, lad?" lie
[ usked, with concern.
| "No, uncle," replied the nipper with
j a grin, "them's gymnastic feats."
"I'm sorry 'bout hat," quoth tha
old chap. " 'As she 'ad 'em long?"—
Answers.
One Fellow's Wish.
Crawford—I hear he thinks of mar-
rying again. Does he hope to get a
wife like his first?
Crabshaw—No; different.
CALOMEL U MS! NO! STOP!
ACTS LIKE OIK OH LB
I Guarantee "Godsons' Liver Tone" Will Give You the Best Liver
and Bowel Cleansing You Ever Had—Doesn't Make You Sick!
Stop using calomel! It makes you
sick. Don't lose a day'b work, if yoq
feel lazy, sluggish, bilious or consti-
pated, listen to me!
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver
which causeB necrosis of the bones
trlct there was only one field suitable | Calomel, when It comes Into contact
for drilling, and as the two opposition | with sour bile < rashes into it, breaking
armies wanted it, the owner began I it up. This in when you feel that aw-
bidding them against each other, j ful nausea and cramping, if you feel
Northern cannlness asserted itself, i "nil knocked out," if your liver Is tor-
The commanding officer of one battal-
ion approached the enemy, and they
agreed to rent the field in common,
and use it on alternate days!
A third anecdote relates that while
some Ulster volunteers were drilling
a Nationalist was seen sitting on a
fence watching them. When he was
questioned by an Ulstertnan he ex-
plained that his own company had
mislaid their rides and could not
drill; "but," he added, "we were wait-
ing to see if we could get the loan of
yours when you've done with them."
For Nail in the Foot.
Horses and cattle are liable to blood
poisoning from stepping on rusty nails.
For such an injury apply llanford's
Balsam of Myrrh and get it into the
bottom of the wound It should kill
the poison germs. Always have a bot-
tle In your stable, because you will
find different uses for it. Adv.
No Excuse.
Representative Bacon of Georgia
was condemning In a Macon club the
German general staff for its anti-
quated close formation In attack, a
formation which costs the German
army thousands of lives.
"Close formation," he said, "was
excellent in Napoleon's day, but with
our modern machine guns, shooting
myriads of bullets a minute, it is a
useless. It is a cruel waste of life."
But," said a German-American,
"we've got so many men, you know,
congressman—we've got bo many, we
can afford to—er—to lose—"
"My friend," Mr. Bacon interrupted,
"would you excuse your cook for serv-
ing you watery soup because there
had been a rainy season?"
Important to Mothers
Examine careful!) every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe aud_sure remedy for
Infants and childre-1, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
pid and bowels constipated or you
fc-ve headache, dizziness, coated
! tongue, if breath is bad or stomach
i sour just try a spoonful of harmless
Hudson's Liver Tone.
Here's my guarantee—Go to any
drug store or dealer and get a 50-cent
bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone. Tako a
Not Due to Ignorance.
Dr. Briggs received a note from a
farmer living back quite a ways in the
country, requesting him to come as
quickly as possible to see his child
who was very sick with "a very bad
cold "
"lie doctor examined the child and
then turned to the mother.
"Don't you know," he asked, "that
your little girl is coming down with
the measles?"
"Yes, doctor," was the woman's re-
ply, "I knew she was."
"Then why in the world," asked the
doctor, "did you write me that she had
a very bad cold?"
The woman heBitated. for a moment,
then, looking at her husband, Bald,
with sullen frankness:
"Neither him nor me knew how to
spell measles.' "—National Monthly.
spoonful and if it doesn't straighten
you right up and make you feel fine
and vigorous I want you to go back to
the store and get your money. Dod-
son's Liver Tone Is destroying thu
sale of calomel because it is real liver
medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore
It cannot salivate or make you sick.
I guarantee that one spoonful of
Dodson's Liver Tone will put your
Bluggish liver to work and clean your
bowels of that Bour bile and consti-
pated waste which Is clogging your
system and making you feel miserable.
I guarantee that a bottle of Dodson's
Liver Tone will keep your entire fam-
ily feeling fine for months. Give it to
your children, it is harmless; doesn't
gripe and .they like Its pleasant taste.
Neuralgia
Sour Milk Johnny Cake.
Two tablespoonfuls of butter and
one cupful of flour mixed with one
cupful of cornmeal; add half a cupful
of sugar, half a teaspoonful of baking
powder and half a teaspoonful of salt,
one cupful of rour milk, and two well-
beaten eggs. Turn the mixture into
a well-buttered pan and hake in a hot
oven. Sour cream may be substituted
for sour milk.
Where England Leads.
England is ahead of the United
Slates in the development of the au-
tomatic telephone service, and con-
tracts for automatic exchanges of the
total value of nearly five hundred
thousand dollars have been placed.
The Greatest Chasm.
The greatest chasm between the
producer and the consumer is the
mudhole.
I would not discourage foreign mis-
sionary work, but I am rather envious
of the permanent highways that have
been constructed in some of the coun-
tries to which we are sending Chris-
tian missionaries.—Homer T. Wade,
secretary Texas Good Roads associa-
tion.
Befitting Punishment.
Edith—The wretch! So he actually
proposed lo both of us! Oh, 1 wish we
could think of some way to punish
YOt'R OWN IHitfifilST Mill, TI! r VOC
Try Marine Kvi- Kemeily n.r H.-d Wink, Woi.rv
Wyes and Urunnlateil l.y. ll.y. : No Snin ti. na-
J at Kye Comfort. WllJe lor Hook of ti,.- ' •
by mail free. Murine l-;ye Itemed? t o. Cltir
Ktb
Sure.
"Ail the world's a stage quoted the
sage.
"Yes," replied the fool, "but it lucks
an asbestos drop curtain."
Rod Cross Ball Blue, much better, goes
farther than liquid blue. Get from any
grocer. Adv.
•Madg
dear
We can; you marry him,
Money for Christmas.
Selling guaranteed wear-proof hosi-
ery to friends & neighbors. Big Xinas
business. Wear-Proof Mills, 3200
Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.—Adv.
Pajama9 for the Destitute.
IIoboeB cared for next winter at the
municipal lodging house in St. Louis
w ill wear pajamas, if the plans of Di
rector of Public Welfare Tolkacz are
successful.
The pajamas will not be fancy and
will not contain ribbons and elaborate
trimmings, but they will be service-
able The night garments probably
will be made of material similar to
that used for overalls and Jumpers.
The purpose of the pajamas equip-
ment is to provide the lodgers with
covering during the night, while their
clothing is being sterilized The cots
used are of steel, and no bed clothing
Is furnished.
Expenses Cut Down.
" "We must admit that the cost of liv-
ing is rather high," said the campaign
adviser.
"\\ ell,'' replied Senator Sorghum,
we must do something with the mon-
ey We can't buy votes with It any
more."—Washington Star.
llanford's Balsam is used to cool
bums. Adv.
Every little helps—especially little
kicks when you're going down hill
There is no need to suffer the
annoying, excruciating pain of
neuralgia; Sloan's Liniment laid
on gently w ill soothe the aching
head like magic. Don't delay.
Try it at once.
Hear What Others Say
"I have been a sufferer with Neuralgia
for several y- ara end have tried different I
I.inimcnta, nut Rutin'i Liniment is tho |
best Liniment for Neuralgia on earth. I
I liave tried it sueeetsfully; it has never |
failed."—F. It. IViUiamx, Auyuata, Ark. \
ifrt. Rnth C. Clavpool, Inflepmdence.,
Mo., vritea: "A friend of ours told in I
aboutyour Liniment. We havo been using |
it for 13 yenrsttnd think thorn is nothing I
tiko It. wo use it on everything, sorts, |
cuts, bans. Is It Isw, nistlinwt, I
and on everythiiiK < -'■ Wu cjin'L got |
along without it. VV'e thiidt it is the beat |
Liniment made."
SLOAN'S
LINIMENT!
| ia the host remedy for rheumatism,
| backache, sore throat and sprains. |
At all dealer*, 25c.
Send four cents in stamps for
TRIAL BOTTLE
Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Inc.
| Dept. B. Philadelphia, Pa. I
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 44-1914.
Marguerites.
Whites of three eggs, one quart qf
peanuts (in shell), one teaspoonful va
nilla, one and one-half or two cupfuls
powdered sugar; beat whites of eggs
very stiff, chop peanuts rather fine;
mix all together and drop on laltinu
crackers, brown lightly in oven
About Kid Gloves.
Always powder the Inside of new
gloves before wearing them, as it
makes them easier to slip on. It also
prevents the dye of colored ones from
staining the hands.
A widower never invests in a guitar
for the purpose of serenading a Bpin-
ster. He begins right where he left
off at the end of his first courtship
For harness eoreB apply Hanford's
Balsam. Adv.
A maid of twenty tries to act like a
widow of forty, a widow of forty tries
to act like a maid of twenty—and
there you are.
Canada Using Cotton-Seed Oil.
Because of the war Canada is al-
ready in need of drugs and chemicals.
Scarcity of olive oil has led to the use
of American cotton-seed oil as a sub-
stitute
After the second baby arrives a
woman seldom changes the style of
doing up her hair.
To prevent gangrene use Hanford's
Balsam because it cleanses and heals
the wound. Adv.
You don't have to play poker with a
man to win his friendship.
Boils
Biliousness
Malaria
Constipation
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
Perhaps this case may be similar to yonrs
J. We,leu Tillu of(Soj 673.) Selmn. CaL. wrltet!
Gentlemen:—"It glvea me much pleasure to be lit ]<3
to send you a t utimonial, if by its reaching: s< me
■ ulierer your medicine® will do as much for hun us thry
nave for me. At the age of fourteen 1 was troubled
a Jn'cst deal with malaria and biliousness, aeeompsnied
with the worst sort of iar^e boils. 1 was persuaded by
my parents, who have oJ ways hoen strong believers in
Dr. Pierce's remedies, to trv the Golden Medical
Uucuvery, I took one bottle and the boils ail dis-
appeared, but I did not stop at one bottle. 1 took threo
and the malaria all left me and I have had no mora
boris to this day. thanks to tho 'Golden Medical
Discovery for my relief.
Lledi.-al AJT) «r.
ly 81 cent* for this 10U0 pane book.
for over forty years has
been lending its aid to just
such cases as this. In our
possession we have thou-
sands of testimonials of like
character.
Perhaps you are skeptical,
but isn't it worth at least a
trial in view of such strong
testimony? Isn't it reason-
able to suppose that if it
has done so much for others
it can do as much for you ?
Your druirtrlst will aapply yoa In
liquid or tablet form, or you can
•end 50 on<*-ceot stamps for a trial
box. Address
Dr. 1L V. Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y.
Because of tnoee ugly, grizzly, gray hair*. Use "LA CHEOLE" HAIR 0RE8SlNQ^mcETsi!oo^tair
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Burke, J. J. The Daily Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 131, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 17, 1914, newspaper, November 17, 1914; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc112839/m1/3/?rotate=90: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.